EEVblog Electronics Community Forum

Products => Crowd Funded Projects => Topic started by: andersendr on April 11, 2014, 03:56:38 pm

Title: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: andersendr on April 11, 2014, 03:56:38 pm
A small portable printer that moves itself, not the paper.  Its like the Roomba but instead of removing things, it add them. 

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1686304142/the-mini-mobile-robotic-printer (https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1686304142/the-mini-mobile-robotic-printer)
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: electr_peter on April 11, 2014, 04:19:28 pm
It is printing head ONLY with wheels to move on paper left/right up/down. What kind of printing time and resolution are we talking about? Resolution and movement accuracy are of paramount importance to printers and scanners, that the reason to have sturdy frame. Driving around the paper would result in accumulated errors.
Printing A4 page takes some time. How long do you wait if you want to print 10 pages?

I am not sure why you would want to support such device - it is expensive, slow, would produce lower quality than conventional printing. Who needs low quality personal device-printer to carry with them all day? It would make nice toy though if it does what they promise on KS.

Bonus points for showing semi-working prototype and case.
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: andersendr on April 11, 2014, 04:53:32 pm
It's not my project but it seems interesting.  I work in the field on job sites a lot.  It sure would be nice to whip out something to reprint a drawing that I just red lined.  Or if you need to print out a quick document to sign or you need to have a paper copy of permit.  To me it seems they are in the wrong market as this is an inferior product in the consumer market in time, quality, and price.

According to their info, it takes about 1 minute to print an A4.  The resolution isn't great at 96x192 dpi, but that is more than enough to print B/W stuff.  They clam the final product will have higher resolution, but they don't say.
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: ferrix on April 11, 2014, 05:17:46 pm
It's cute, in a maker/art-project-y way.  But I don't understand what the market is for this.  The only thing I can think of is for really large paper that needs to be very sparsely printed.  But you'd have to have crazy good position tracking to make that work. 

Anything else: have you seen how portable they can get inkjets these days?
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: electr_peter on April 11, 2014, 05:24:01 pm
I work in the field on job sites a lot.  It sure would be nice to whip out something to reprint a drawing that I just red lined.  Or if you need to print out a quick document to sign or you need to have a paper copy of permit.  To me it seems they are in the wrong market as this is an inferior product in the consumer market in time, quality, and price.
I agree that mini printer market is very undefined or niche.
To me, printing on paper signifies that it is "last resort" or "final touch" of something you have finished or are serious about doing. I would try not to print at all unless:
   1) I need to read multiple pages on the screen. That is too much for my eyes. Sometimes paper makes a quick reference that you can write on. Requirements: moderate amount of pages to print, quality could be low.
   2) I need to make official/work document, few pages worth. Requirements: content of page and printing quality must be good.
   3) I am printing some material for other people to read. I would try to use good quality printer, not sub par one.
   4) other cases

Thus, I don't immediately see where lower quality printer could be useful, except for some extra/emergency cases. It is like a very crude 3D printer (slow, low quality, expensive) in a market of good quality and cheap 3D printers(3D market haven't reached this stage yet, but printers certainly did long time ago).
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: Duane Degn on April 12, 2014, 03:38:09 am
This has received a lot of backers and I'm afraid a lot of people are going to be disappointed in the final product.

The images on the Kickstarter page give the impression the robotic printer can print full page technical drawings and graphics. Yet the video just shows the robot printing single line of text.

Trying to get a robot to travel in a straight line with the precision required to print the type of documents they imply it will be able to print is a near impossibility.

These guys are business students dabbling in robotics and they don't have clue how to accomplish what they are promising. You can see some of the "development" work in posts at Let's Make Robots. The LMR member kkffiirr http://letsmakerobots.com/user/20833 (http://letsmakerobots.com/user/20833) has asked several questions revealing his lack of robotics knowledge.

I don't think they have been honest in describing the risks backers are taking by supporting the project. To make a robot capable of printing as well as they imply their robot will, is next to impossible.

Their "prototype" is a Parallax ink jet printer kit mounted on some omni wheels (normal wheels would have worked for their "demo" video). Here's a video of the printer kit used free hand.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hHS7rObiB2Q (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hHS7rObiB2Q)

This printer might work reasonably well printing text only documents if you didn't need the print to be high quality, but it's certainly not going to be able to print the type of documents shown in the photos.

I think this qualifies as a scam.

I thought Kickstarter projects had to have a working prototype?

BTW, I like to build robots myself and I've made many different kinds including robots with omni wheels. I won't post links to my stuff by it's easy to find by searching my name.
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: CanadianAvenger on April 12, 2014, 03:54:41 am
I think this qualifies as a scam.

I thought Kickstarter projects had to have a working prototype?


They do, at about 1:20 in the  video is the prototype printing a message on a piece of paper that reads "hey kickstarter backers!"

It's good enough to qualify as a proof-of-concept prototype. Whether or not they can improve it enough to meet their spec goals is another story altogether.
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: Duane Degn on April 12, 2014, 04:35:30 am
I disagree. Printing a single line with Parallax Inkjet kit is nothing like making a robot capable of printing a page. Would a 3D printer only able to print in 2D be considered a prototype? They are claiming to make a 2D printer not a 1D printer. A big, big difference. All the work of the prototype is done by the Parallax kit.

If I had a Parallax Inkjet kit, I could reproduce what they've done in a few hours (it would take me a bit longer to make is as small as their demo bot but it still wouldn't be hard). Making a 2D printer capable of reasonable quality print is next to impossible using a wheeled robot as they propose. It might be possible, but they should be honest about the risk of a printer never being produced.
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: sleemanj on April 12, 2014, 04:53:05 am
Yeah, no way is this going to work, not in any way close to their claims anyway.

1 minute for a full page?  Nope.  1 minute for a line on a page maybe.  It's going to have major problems with uneven surfaces (hope that table is perfectly flat), slippery paper, etc... no way will you get both horizontal and vertical movement accuracy of sufficient quality.  I don't think hard plastic omniwheels are going to give you movement accuracy for a start.




Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: CanadianAvenger on April 12, 2014, 04:56:52 am
Note I was saying it was good enough as a proof-of-concept to pass the "prototype" requirement of kickstarter.  Yes the parallax kit is doing all the printing work. they then bolted that onto a robot carriage to make a printing robot. So it is more than just the parallax kit. Otherwise we could claim that pretty much every FDM 3D printer that came out of the maker movement is "just an Arduino" Don't get me wrong, I don't see what they're pitching as revolutionary, and I'm not even sure they can pull it off to the level of quality needed to get a high quality print, but I don't see any issue in them taking a run at it. As for positional tracking accuracy, I don't see that as an insurmountable problem... an optical mouse sensor is a cheap and very effective high resolution positional sensor that can be used to ensure the bot moves both straight, and the desired distance.
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: pickle9000 on April 12, 2014, 05:00:08 am
Is everyone here too young to know a "turtle" when they see one?
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: Jarrod Roberson on April 12, 2014, 05:10:12 am
As for positional tracking accuracy, I don't see that as an insurmountable problem... an optical mouse sensor is a cheap and very effective high resolution positional sensor that can be used to ensure the bot moves both straight, and the desired distance.

Sensing relative position, and DOING absolute positioning are two completely different things, the first is easy the second one is a completely impossible task in an open loop system with absolutely no tolerance controls like this one.

High resolution mechanical positioning systems require extreme tolerances and closed loop feedback control, which this toy doesn't have either. I bet that just the drain on the battery would affect the positioning motors enough to cause the thing to introduce error accumulations that would skew over just a few lines of a drawing. Any fluctuations in traction would completely destroy the alignment of a single line much line multiple horizontal lines over a foot of distance, and these would be irrecoverable, the ink would already be down, done deal no way to correct for it
!

One thing is guaranteed, this thing will never print out those line drawings that they have the thing sitting on top of.

If this is as trivial to build and accurate as they claim, someone would have already done it. long time ago, or it would be replicated easily by everyone that wanted one with simple parts and there would be no market for it. Not that there is a market for it now.

Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: sleemanj on April 12, 2014, 05:15:41 am
Is everyone here too young to know a "turtle" when they see one?

Stupid thing is, if somebody made a pen drawing tutlebot now, slapped an arduino on top, and interpreted "logo" commands from an SD card, and threw it on kickstarter, they'd probably sell a ton of the suckers. 

Maybe I shouldn't have given away that brilliant idea.  Ah. I'm, too lazy anyway.




Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: CanadianAvenger on April 12, 2014, 05:16:58 am
Yeah, no way is this going to work, not in any way close to their claims anyway.

1 minute for a full page?  Nope.  1 minute for a line on a page maybe.  It's going to have major problems with uneven surfaces (hope that table is perfectly flat), slippery paper, etc... no way will you get both horizontal and vertical movement accuracy of sufficient quality.  I don't think hard plastic omniwheels are going to give you movement accuracy for a start.

I'll agree on your point on speed, I don't see them reaching the 40sec per page speed mentioned in the FAQ.

I covered positional accuracy in my previous reply.  The prototype has hard plastic [looks like 3d printed] wheels, does not mean the final production unit will. They will indeed have a lot of slip, you can even see it happening in the video. But with a good feedback mechanism from something an optical mouse sensor, the slippage can be compensated for.

As for uneven surfaces, that goes beyond the scope. They are not claiming you can print on any old surface. Obviously the surface needs to be relatively smooth and flat, and free of any debris, otherwise the quality of the print may be affected. This ultimately comes down to the user using the device properly, and not a defect in the device itself. Sorry, can't blame the tool for that one -- but it is a statement on how useful the device really is, as a sufficiently smooth/flat surface to get a decent print, may be harder to come by than they think.

 
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: CanadianAvenger on April 12, 2014, 05:30:52 am

Sensing relative position, and absolute positioning are two completely different things, the first is easy the second one is a completely impossible task in an open loop system with absolutely no tolerance controls like this one.

Absolute positioning [with a degree of error] is accomplished by the user placing the bot down at the top left corner of the page [note the shape of the bot aids this] Everything is relative from there.  Guess what, your desktop printer does the same thing, it has an optical sensor that detects the to edge of the page, and then assumes relative position from there. If the page happens to feed in crookedly, the print comes out crooked. Just in this case it is more prone to being non-parallel to the edge due to user positioning error.

I do agree that you are unlikely to get high quality prints out of this thing, I would expect something more along the lines of draft quality. [again goes towards the real-world usefulness of it] I imagine that the HP's and Epson's of the world have tried this and concluded that getting high quality output was too variable and too hard for the end user for the product to be deemed as useful, thus never brought to market.
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: pickle9000 on April 12, 2014, 05:32:42 am
Is everyone here too young to know a "turtle" when they see one?

Stupid thing is, if somebody made a pen drawing tutlebot now, slapped an arduino on top, and interpreted "logo" commands from an SD card, and threw it on kickstarter, they'd probably sell a ton of the suckers. 

Maybe I shouldn't have given away that brilliant idea.  Ah. I'm, too lazy anyway.

Yup that would probably sell. For people who want to see a turtle here you go.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turtle_%28robot%29 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turtle_%28robot%29)

As for making a small printer try making an old fashioned plotter. It's completely possible to shrink a plotter / vinyl cutter and keep reasonable output. No you can't print a photo, you can draw a picture.

Amazingly cheap on ebay for a big one.

http://www.ebay.ca/itm/New-24-Redsail-Vinyl-cutting-plotter-Best-Value-Sign-vinyl-cutter-Kit-Artcut-/251454461377?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_2&hash=item3a8bda95c1 (http://www.ebay.ca/itm/New-24-Redsail-Vinyl-cutting-plotter-Best-Value-Sign-vinyl-cutter-Kit-Artcut-/251454461377?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_2&hash=item3a8bda95c1)







Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: Jarrod Roberson on April 12, 2014, 05:54:48 am
the "degree of error" will accumulate so quickly at 192dpi that it will be crap in just a few mm.

I ran high resolution single pixel laser scanners back in the day and can tell you that doing absolute positioning at the resolutions that they are implying the marketing materials is impossible from vibration of the motors alone, the variability of the drive train mechanical slop and the electrical variances in driving the motors. Even at the extremely slow axial speeds those laser scanners ran at and the extreme tolerances, I still had to rescan stuff all the time because the table or machine got bumped and there would be gaps. Same applies here, just in reverse. I am pretty confident that just typing on the laptop on a shaky cafe table would throw this thing off over 1 - 2 mm of distance.

This thing would need CRAZY accurate mechanicals that would cost 1000X what they are aiming for, and probably would just barely meet their target specifications and the implied quality of the technical drawings they are implying are possible. And would be 1000X slower than they can imagine.

And that would be for a single line, as soon as they moved down the page, all bets are off, there is no way to position a open loop system like that at that resolution, the mechanics are just too sloppy, there is no way to sense or measure external inputs.

There is a reason inkjet printers run on isolated rails and only in one axis and the paper feed mechanisms are prone to leave gaps even in modern inkjet printers. And guess what, once that ink is on the page that gap is there there is no "compensating" for it, that bell can't be unrung, you just wasted expensive ink and more expensive time.
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: PlainName on April 12, 2014, 09:23:30 am
Quote
no way to position a open loop system like that

As someone pointed out above, perhaps it isn't an open loop system. Using, for instance, a mouse sensor for tracking makes it closed loop, doesn't it?
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: CanadianAvenger on April 13, 2014, 04:17:25 am
It looks like they are indeed using an optical mouse sensor for feedback... this was confirmed earlier today in the comments. [about 9 hours ago]
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: FreddyVictor on April 13, 2014, 07:10:35 am
as others have already said, interesting idea, but probably going to dissapoint

the 'test' print in the video was done in ideal conditions ie perfectly flat table etc and I would imagine it would have issues if the surface wasn't level
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: Jarrod Roberson on April 15, 2014, 01:28:59 pm
Quote
no way to position a open loop system like that
As someone pointed out above, perhaps it isn't an open loop system. Using, for instance, a mouse sensor for tracking makes it closed loop, doesn't it?

No it doesn't, because the accuracy and latency of the positioning mechanics isn't accurate enough to respond at the resolution of a mouse sensor. Just the variability in the slop of the drive train is going to be unaccountable for with that low of resolution/tolerance parts. The slightest input onto the table surface is going to throw this thing off more than it can account for quicker than it can recover from.

This is just a big FAIL.
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: PlainName on April 15, 2014, 01:42:39 pm
Quote
No it doesn't, because the accuracy and latency of the positioning mechanics isn't accurate enough to respond at the resolution of a mouse sensor.

Forgive me for being a bit dense here, but are you saying that the slop in the drive chain means that there isn't a closed loop? Would it be closed if the mouse sensor was sufficiently inaccurate to match the drive chain slop?

This question isn't about whether the product can perform to spec or whether they will rely on pre-packed magic. It is merely asking if some method of feedback coupled with some method of control taking into account that feedback constitutes a feedback loop (even an awfully shit and not fit for purpose one).
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: PlainName on April 15, 2014, 02:36:39 pm
Quote
The slightest input onto the table surface is going to throw this thing off more than it can account for quicker than it can recover from.

This is just a big FAIL.

I fear that you have created for yourself a strawman (or, if you prefer, a red herring; a MacGuffin). I recommend that you take a chill pill before reading on  :-+

It doesn't matter that there is slop in the wheels. They don't even need very accurate control of them. What they do need to do is ask one question and execute three actions (though two of those are implied by the question):

Code: [Select]
Q1: Do I need to drop a blob of ink here?
If yes:
   A1a: Drop blob of ink
   A1b: Tick off location from list of locations to be blobbed

A2: Steer towards next blob location

Et voila. The mouse sensor tells them absolutely where they are (at least, absolutely relative to some reference, maybe the top left corner of the paper). As you note, it is very accurate. All they need to do is wave that bot in roughly the right location and wait until the exact point passes underneath, whereupon it gets blobbed. Think of those LED wands which display messages when you wave them in the air, but instead of light they're using ink:

LED message wand (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v99Jfwz4ORo)

Worst case, they spend a fair amount of time trying to get their sloppy wheels to get over the spot (but, they'll have a list of blob spots so can drop other ones on the way to the one they're aiming at, to save time). But don't forget they are using an inket head, which has a width and a number of jets across that width. If the inaccuracy of the drive train is still within the width of the print head then they don't even need to jiggle because they can just select the right jet as it passes over the blob location.

Blimey. Wish I'd thought of this first.

[Edit: fixed tyops]
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: scientist on April 24, 2014, 09:30:23 pm
I could imagine using it for PCBs if it was a laser printer and not a cheap inkjet. 
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: PlainName on April 24, 2014, 11:08:29 pm
Quote
if it was a laser printer and not a cheap inkjet

Get a laser printer into that package and I suspect you could make a fortune without needing to have it trundle over the paper at all :)
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: Jarrod Roberson on April 25, 2014, 12:46:07 am
Quote
The slightest input onto the table surface is going to throw this thing off more than it can account for quicker than it can recover from.

This is just a big FAIL.

I fear that you have created for yourself a strawman (or, if you prefer, a red herring; a MacGuffin). I recommend that you take a chill pill before reading on  :-+

Mouse sensor can't detect or measure YAW, only relative X/Y translation speed and direction.
And it will never have absolute positioning to recover from YAW errors. Thus it has no feedback loop for correcting YAW.
Just the normal motion of this thing will introduce YAW errors that can't be recovered from.
It isn't as simple a problem you make it out to be, this is not going to be solved at the price point they are targeting, if it could be, it would have already been done.
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: CanadianAvenger on April 25, 2014, 03:23:18 am
For yaw to be an issue the center of rotation would have to be concentrically aligned with the optical center of the sensor [an unlikely scenario in this case]. Having said that, yaw can be detected, and measured by using 2 mouse sensors, as any rotational component will show up as a differential between the two sensors.
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: scientist on April 25, 2014, 03:36:10 am
They may also be using gyros.
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: Duane Degn on May 03, 2014, 09:04:57 am
They've clarified how they are going to solve, pardon me, "have solved" the yaw issue.
On April 20 they posted:

Quote
We solved the problem of printing two lines in parallel by designing the drive system in such a way, that the robot has only two degrees of freedom, it is only able to move along the X and Y axis and cannot rotate around the Z axis at all.
Also there is no backlash because the wheels are connected directly to the motors.
All of the above, in combination with high resolution optical flow sensor, allows us to control the printer position with high accuracy.
Here's a video we posted bellow from a few months back showing multi line printing (you may have missed it)-
http://youtu.be/-tcYm_WWFys (http://youtu.be/-tcYm_WWFys)

This "optical sensor" is also mentioned at the bottom of the FAQ section. The last question asks "How does the printer keep the paper stable?" To which they answer:

Quote
Combination of the printer's weight and its Omni-wheels, also, the stepper motor make micro and steady steps, so there aren't any sudden accelerations. We're using a high resolution optical laser sensor in order to control the movement, speed and placement of the bot.

So if they're limiting the robot's movement to two degrees of freedom what is the "high resolution optical flow sensor" sensor? Detecting missed steps in the stepper motors?

Is there such a thing as a stepper motor with the precision this would require? They say there's "no backlash" so it must not have a gearbox.

I'm really at a loss to figure out if they really think this will work. I'm not inclined to think they're just going to take the money and run but from my experience of building small robots, I don't see how their two degrees of freedom strategy has a remote chance of working except to possibly print lines of text which don't require multiple passes to align precisely.
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: PlainName on May 03, 2014, 10:25:22 am
Damn, I should've patented my idea :)

I have no doubt that their system will work, but it will probably work in a flaky way: given a optimal setup it will do the biz, but use the wrong paper or the wrong surface, etc...
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: Jarrod Roberson on May 05, 2014, 12:42:34 am
maybe the machine can't move in the Y axis, but the slightest bump on the surface it is "printing" on can induce an open loop yaw and it will never detect it.

To prove this just put your mouse on any semi-unstableized surface and bump the surface and see if the mouse registers the movement.

This the open loop I mentioned before, if they can't move in the Y axis then they can't compensate for the Y axis.
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: Duane Degn on January 05, 2015, 06:06:41 pm
I don't see how their two degrees of freedom strategy has a remote chance of working except to possibly print lines of text which don't require multiple passes to align precisely.

I think my prediction has come true. I think it's clear the printer will only be printing lines of text which don't require multiple coordinated passes.

Not surprisingly their latest video keeps the robot on the paper the entire print (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h4ba5ommDa4). I imagine the transitions from paper to desktop and back to paper would cause an alignment issue for the robot.

Since the robot needs to stay on the paper, they are making the robot even smaller than the one shown in the KickStarter video. This has meant they had to modify an existing cartridge in order to make it as small as possible.

A lot of backers are upset by the change to a proprietary cartridge but I don't think ZUtA Labs had much of a choice in the matter. The margins shown on their video are very large. If their robot were any larger, there would be even less room for text.

I still think this KickStarter campaign (https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1686304142/the-mini-mobile-robotic-printer/description) was misleading.  The "story" section of the campaign includes five photos of printed pages. I think it is very unlikely the robot will ever be able to duplicate a single one of the "example" prints.

I do think whoever ZUtA Labs got to build their latest robot did a great job. IMO, the printer is working as well as could be expected given the severe limitations of having only two degrees of freedom with the robot's motion.

I doubt many of the backers realize the wide margins in the update video are mandatory. The backers seem more upset about the proprietary cartridge than they are about the small printable area on a page.

Edit: Fixed links. This forum uses a different format for links than what I'm used to. Thanks electr_peter for pointing it out.
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: electr_peter on January 05, 2015, 06:33:32 pm
Repaired link (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h4ba5ommDa4)

They have a prototype (polished from outside) that prints something, that's good.
However, print quality is not shown; printing speed is pretty slow; those margins are a bit wide; it uses proprietary small cartridges. :palm:
Even the linked video shows two different prints of the same page (look at left margin in the middle and the end of the video) - I hope that is not CG or repeated attempts to get something printed...
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: sunnyhighway on January 05, 2015, 10:34:20 pm
They have a prototype (polished from outside) that prints something, that's good.

Where do you see it actually print?

The clever montage of the individual shots give you only the impression something is being printed.
At no point in the video you can see a single letter being printed on a spot that was not printed at the beginning of that shot.

All I see is a robot that moves over a pre-printed piece of paper.

I call Shenanigans...
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: Duane Degn on January 05, 2015, 10:55:30 pm
Where do you see it actually print?

The clever montage of the individual shots give you only the impression something is being printed.
At no point in the video you can see a single letter being printed on a spot that was not printed at the beginning of that shot.

All I see is a robot that moves over a pre-printed piece of paper.

I call Shenanigans...

While I also think plenty of shenanigans are going on, I'd be surprised if they didn't have a robot capable of printing a few lines.

At 0:26 in the video, a new line of text appears as the robot moves to the right.

I do think it's very suspicious the top three lines of the text are so different when seen at 0:32 and 0:40. It sure looks like 0:40 page is different from the 0:32 page.

I don't see why they would fake the print but then leave the misaligned text shown at 0:32.
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: electr_peter on January 05, 2015, 11:27:46 pm
~0:20 - paper is very shiny, like a plastic, and thick. I have seen various type of paper, but I would not call that an ordinary paper for printing purposes. If it is paper at all...
Whole video seems to be heavily edited - most likely to hide actual limitations of printing action and inconsistent printing (or whatever action it tries to imitate) quality.
I still think that some printing action is going on. Printing demo (that is, single word was printed in one go) was demonstrated (if I recall correctly) few times before with a barebone robot.

I found a real alternative for printing wherever you are aficionados. Brother makes PocketJet printer - it can print on thermal A4 paper. Not too bad except for the special paper.
Or you can use HandJet EBS 250 portable printer (laber printer for outdoor use).
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: PlainName on January 06, 2015, 12:51:22 am
That Handjet is brilliant. Wish I had a) an application for it, and b) the funds (they don't give a price, which normally means "We're afraid to tell you because it's so expensive").
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: Mr.B on January 06, 2015, 01:05:57 am
That Handjet is brilliant. Wish I had a) an application for it, and b) the funds (they don't give a price, which normally means "We're afraid to tell you because it's so expensive").

About USD3500 each.
Standard ink about USD75
Quick dry ink about USD100

Not involved with the product in any way, just saw it at a trade show recently and thought it was so cool.
I don't know the price of the EBS-260, but that model looks better again.
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: PlainName on January 06, 2015, 01:55:01 am
Oh dear. That's almost affordable  :palm:
Title: Re: The Mini Mobile Robotic Printer
Post by: Duane Degn on January 06, 2015, 04:05:57 pm
Here's why I don't think the video is a complete fake.

(http://forums.parallax.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=112687&d=1420559899)

If they were faking the video, why would they leave the above image in it?

It's clear from later in the video (0:40), the top three lines are supposed to be equally spaced. I also think they were intended to be parallel.